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ErbiumFor coating for sunglasses.
| Atomic Number: | 68 | Atomic Symbol: | Er |
| Atomic Weight: | 167.26 | Electron Configuration: | 2-8-30-8-2 |
| Shells: | 2,8,18,30,8,2 | Filling Orbital: | 4f12 |
| Melting Point: | 1522oC | Boiling Point: | 2510oC |
| Description: | Grayish-silver rare earth metal. |
| Uses: | |
History
(Ytterby, a town in Sweden)
- Erbium, one of the so-called rare-earth elements on the lanthanide series, is found in the minerals mentioned under dysprosium.
- In 1842 Mosander separated "yttria" found in the mineral gadolinite, into three fractions which he called yttria, erbia, and terbia.
- The names erbia and terbia became confused in this early period.
- After 1860, Mosander's terbia was known as erbia, and after 1877, the earlier known erbia became terbia.
- The erbia of this period was later shown to consist of five oxides, now known as erbia, scandia, holmia, thulia and ytterbia.
- By 1905 Urbain and James independently succeeded in isolating fairly pure Er2O3.
- Klemm and Bommer first produced reasonably pure erbium metal in 1934 by reducing the anhydrous chloride with potassium vapor.
Properties
- The pure metal is soft and malleable and has a bright, silvery, metallic luster.
- As with other rare-earth metals, its properties depend to a certain extent on the impurities present.
- The metal is fairly stable in air and does not oxidize as rapidly as some of the other rare-earth metals.
- Naturally occurring erbium is a mixture of six isotopes, all of which are stable.
- Nine radioactive isotopes of erbium are also recognized.
Costs
Recent production techniques, using ion-exchange reactions, have resulted in much lower prices of the rare-earch metals and their compounds in recent years.
The cost of 99+% erbium metal is about $650/kg.
Uses
- Erbium is finding nuclear and metallurgical uses.
- Added to vanadium, for example, erbium lowers the hardness and improves workability. Most of the rare-earth oxides have sharp absorption bands in the visible, ultraviolet, and near infrared.
- This proerty, associated with the electronic structure, gives beautiful pastel colors to many of the rare-earth salts.
- Erbium oxide gives a pink color and has been used as a colorant in glasses and porcelain enamel glazes.
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